News: Brazil Refuses $40M in U.S. AIDS Grants To Protest Policy
Requiring
Groups To Condemn Commercial Sex Work
Kaisernetwork.org .May 3, 2005
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Brazilian officials last week said that the country has refused
$40 million in U.S. AIDS grants because of a Bush administration
requirement that HIV/AIDS organizations seeking funding to provide
services in other countries must pledge to oppose commercial sex
work, the Wall Street
Journal reports (Phillips/Moffett, Wall Street Journal, 5/2).
Under the Bush administration policy, even groups whose HIV/AIDS
work in other countries has nothing to do with commercial sex
workers have to make a written pledge opposing commercial sex
work or risk losing federal funding. In addition, the Bush administration
might refuse to fund HIV/AIDS groups that do not accept Bush's
social agenda on issues such as sexual abstinence
and drug use. The new policy stems from two 2003 laws, one involving
HIV/AIDS funding and another regarding sex trafficking (Kaiser
Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 2/28).
Brazilian officials last week wrote to USAID to explain its
decision to refuse the remainder of a $48 million HIV/AIDS grant
that began in 2003 and was scheduled to run through 2008. According
to some HIV/AIDS advocates, Brazil has been a "model"
for combating HIV/AIDS with its "accepting, open" policies
toward commercial sex workers, injection drug users, men who have
sex with men and other "high-risk" groups, the Journal
reports.
Brazilian authorities said that the Bush administration requirement
that groups receiving funding must condemn commercial sex work
would hinder the country's efforts to fight the disease, according
to the Journal. "We can't control (the disease) with principles
that are Manichean, theological,
fundamentalist and Shiite," Pedro Chequer, director of Brazil's
AIDS program and chair of the national commission that decided
to refuse the grants, said, adding that the commission -- which
includes cabinet ministers, scientists and AIDS advocates -- viewed
the Bush administration policy as
"interference that harms the Brazilian policy regarding diversity,
ethical principles and huma n rights."
Brazilian Strategy
Brazil's national AIDS program, which is considered to be one
of the most progressive in the world, includes HIV/AIDS prevention,
care and treatment services. The program manufactures and distributes
generic versions of antiretroviral drugs, providing them at no
cost to all HIV-positive people in the country (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS
Report, 3/16).
Although Brazil's HIV/AIDS prevention strategy emphasizes abstinence
and sexual fidelity, it focuses more on condom education and distribution,
according to the Journal. Commercial sex work is not a crime in
Brazil, and advocates for commercial sex workers have been "among
the most active" in
the country's fight against HIV/AIDS, according to the Journal.
The U.S. grants were to include $190,000 for eight groups that
advocate for commercial sex workers in Brazil, according to Gabriela
Leite, coordinator of the Brazilian Network of Sex Professionals.
Leite said that she had "lengthy" discussions with USAID
to assure U.S. officials that the grant
money received only would be used for HIV/AIDS education and prevention
and not for commercial sex worker rights issues, according to
the Journal.
However, despite a 50-page agreement between USAID and Leite's
group, talks "broke down" when Leite's group refused
to condemn commercial sex work, according to the Journal. "Why
should we adopt a different orientation if we have been successful
for the more than 10 years?" Sonia Correa, a Brazilian AIDS
advocate and co-chair of the International Working Group on Sexuality
and Social Policy, asked.
Although experts in 1992 estimated that 1.2 million HIV-positive
people would live in Brazil by 2002, the country's epidemic has
been "far less serious" because of its prevention efforts,
and by 2002 there were only about 660,000 HIV-positive people
in the country, according to the Journal.
Reaction
"Obviously, Brazil has the right to act however it chooses
in this regard," Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), who has been
a leader for "conservative cause[s]" in Congress, said,
adding that he hopes the grants can be redirected to other countries
with policies that are in line with the Bush
administration, according to the Journal. "We're talking
about promotion of prostitution, which the majority of both the
House and Senate believe is harmful to women," Brownback
added.
USAID spokesperson Roslyn Matthews on Sunday said that the agency
is "still reviewing" Brazil's decision, adding, "We
are in the process of determining next steps." The U.S. grants
were only a "small part" of the amount Brazil spends
on HIV/AIDS programs, and Chequer said the Brazilian government
will increase spending on the programs to make up for the lost
funding, according
to the Journal (Wall Street Journal, 5/2).
Source: Kaisernetwork.org
Online at:
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=29729
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